Millions of middle-class Brazilians who’d hoped to marry, buy homes and start careers feel stuck as the country grapples with a recession. What comes next is anyone’s guess.
Kurdistan Workers’ Party leader Cemil Bayik told the BBC that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was “escalating this war.”
On Monday, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will unveil “Saudi Vision 2030,” which aims to minimize the kingdom’s dependence on oil revenue.
A Chinese military source told the South China Morning Post that Beijing would reclaim land, and could build a runway, on disputed Scarborough Shoal.
The 16-year-old boy was arrested near his Sydney home Sunday and appeared before a children's court Monday.
The U.S. president will discuss issues including the Syrian civil war and terrorism, in a meeting in Germany on Monday.
US President Barack Obama rejected Pyongyang’s offer to halt nuclear tests if Washington ended its annual military exercises with South Korea.
Meirelles, the former central bank president, told the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo that he had agreed to advise Vice President Michel Temer but had not been invited to join a potential cabinet.
London has more billionaires than any other city, according to the Sunday Times’ Rich List.
The ongoing refugee crisis in Europe became the dominant issue in the run-up to the presidential elections.
Nepal created a National Reconstruction Authority in December, and its work will continue over the next five years at an estimated cost of $8 billion.
President Barack Obama spoke at a news conference Sunday in German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Debt as a percentage of China’s gross domestic product hovered at a record 237 percent.
The rockets struck two houses in a poor neighborhood near the town center. Turkish soldiers returned fire into Syria, security sources said.
Opposition leaders and international civil society groups have already dismissed Sunday’s elections as “not credible.”
Ebru Umar, a Turkish-Dutch journalist with the Metro newspaper, tweeted that officials were taking her to a police station in Kusadasi, a town in western Turkey.
The proposal has faced opposition from the U.N. and aid workers who say it would be hard to guarantee the refugees’ safety in the war-torn country.
Aleksandar Vucic called the parliamentary ballot just two years after he became prime minister following a landslide election win for his conservative Progressive Party.
The U.S. limited the travel of North Korean foreign minister, who is in New York for U.N. functions, in response to the reclusive state’s latest missile test-firing.
A trade deal between Britain and the U.S. could take five to 10 years to negotiate if Britain votes to leave the EU at a June 23 referendum, Barack Obama told the BBC.
Following a meeting of EU ministers in Amsterdam, the German finance minister said the cash-strapped country won’t necessarily require an easing of its debt burden.
Otto Warmbier, a University of Virginia student, was detained in January for trying to steal a propaganda banner from a North Korean hotel.
The South China Sea dispute is one of ASEAN’s most contentious issues, as its members struggle to balance mutual support with their growing economic relations with China.
Farmers in Maharashtra state could see a production decline of 29-35 percent, forecasts estimate.
The appointment of Clement Mouamba comes a month after President Denis Sassou Nguesso was elected to a five-year term.
Majed Hussein Al Sadeq, chief of staff of Ahrar al-Sham, died Saturday in an attack at the group's headquarters in Binnish.
The country now has "one more means for powerful nuclear attack," state-run media said early Sunday.
South Africa and Mozambique granted permission after recently found items were deemed “almost certainly” from a missing passenger jet.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blasts, which wounded a further 39 people, police sources told Reuters.
The new Liberal government wants to encourage more locally produced content, the nation's heritage minister said in an interview.